Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Time running out

Act on criminal justice reform

- RYAN NORRIS

Criminal justice reform is going to be a hot topic when the state Legislatur­e reconvenes next year. We operate 20 state prisons with a population exceeding 17,000, and each inmate costs taxpayers $22,000—quite a bit more than we spend on each student in K-12. And we’re likely to need another two or three prisons over the next decade, at a cost of up to $1 billion.

So if our U.S. senators think this issue isn’t important to Arkansans, they’re not paying attention.

Sens. Tom Cotton and John Boozman don’t have a vote on state prison reforms, but they have a chance to do something right now about the federal criminal justice system.

The FIRST STEP Act passed the U.S. House in May by an overwhelmi­ngly bipartisan margin. It has languished since in the Senate. Now, with the 115th Congress headed toward its conclusion, senators need to bring this bill to the floor, pass it and send it to President Donald Trump for his signature.

Here’s why.

A recent poll showed that 70 percent of Americans support overhaulin­g the criminal justice system to place a greater emphasis on rehabilita­tion. That’s what the FIRST STEP Act is about.

The more opportunit­ies former offenders have when they are released, the less likely they are to re-offend. That means less crime, safer communitie­s, and less of a burden on the taxpayers who are paying for it all.

About 2 million Americans are behind bars across all levels of our criminal justice system; almost all of them, 95 percent, will eventually be released. It’s only common sense that we do everything in our power to ensure that these men and women have the skills they’ll need to succeed when they return to their communitie­s.

How do we do that? Research and real-life experience show that vocational training coupled with mental health and substance abuse treatment lead to significan­t reductions in recidivism rates.

FIRST STEP would use such training and treatment as incentives. Incarcerat­ed individual­s who complete them successful­ly would earn credit toward serving the final period of their sentences in halfway houses, under community supervisio­n or in home confinemen­t. Nothing is given. Everything is earned.

This is a policy already in place within the Arkansas state correction­al system, where inmates can receive up to 30 days of good-time credits per month and an additional 270 days of earned-time credits each year.

The measure also includes humanitari­an provisions that can help reduce recidivism, such as housing offenders within 500 miles of their families when possible, and banning the shackling of women prisoners during childbirth.

That this is not a “jailbreak” bill, as some critics have called it, is made obvious by the wide support for the measure from law enforcemen­t.

The Fraternal Order of Police said, “We have a bill that will make our streets and neighborho­ods safer, our police will be better protected and improve the ability of our criminal justice system to effectivel­y rehabilita­te offenders.” The Associatio­n of Prosecutin­g Attorneys called the measure “a significan­t step to advance justice.” Others said it is “the first major piece of federal legislatio­n in decades designed to curb mass re-incarcerat­ion.”

But time is running out. Congress will be in session for less than another month, and Senate leadership is hesitating, even in the wake of an endorsemen­t of the bill from President Donald Trump.

Senators need to act. We should not stand by one more day while taxpayer dollars and human potential are wasted by a system that doesn’t work. Ryan Norris is state director of Americans for Prosperity-Arkansas.

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